Chinese internet giant Tencent Holdings Ltd said yesterday it would lead an $863 million investment in apparel platform Vipshop Holdings Ltd, upping its rivalry in retail with Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

Tencent will invest $604 million in exchange for a seven per cent stake in Vipshop, while e-commerce firm JD.com Inc will invest $259 million for a stake of 5.5 per cent – rising from a previously undisclosed stake of roughly 2.5 per cent – the two firms said in a statement.

The deal extends a recent push by Tencent into Alibaba’s home turf of retail, where the firm hopes to leverage its messaging service WeChat and its online payment systems to drive |shopping demand.

Martin Lau, Tencent’s president, said the tie-up would bring Vipshop Tencent’s “audiences, marketing solutions, and payment support” to help tap China’s rising middle class. Tencent’s WeChat has nearly a billion users.

Alibaba has been looking to reshape the battle lines of China’s online and offline market

The looming retail battle reflects a wider, long-running stand-off between Tencent and Alibaba, who have made competing investments in areas as diverse as bike-sharing apps, food delivery and gaming.

“Right now in the Chinese market we have two internet powers,” said Weiwen Han, managing partner for Greater China at Bain & Company. “Investments will either fall into the Alibaba or Tencent camp.”

He added, however, that such deals were difficult to turn into successful ventures.

“It remains to be seen how they will be integrated successfully, (and) whether or not these will actually be effective investments.”

Alibaba has been looking to reshape the battle lines of China’s online and offline market. Its Tmall and Taobao platforms dominate online and it has invested over $10 billion in a push into brick-and-mortar stores.

Tencent, Asia’s most valuable company with a market capitalisation of $473 billion, plans to invest 4.2 billion yuan ($636 million) for a five per cent stake in supermarket operator Yonghui Superstores Co Ltd.

It is already a major stakeholder in JD.com.

The latest deal, at a 55 per cent premium to Vipshop’s closing share price on Friday, will help Tencent tap the firm’s young, female shoppers and give it access to reams of consumer and transaction data to help it compete with Alibaba’s Alipay.

JD.com’s chief executive Richard Liu said the move would help “expand the breadth and reach of our fashion business”. That comes after he said last month around 100 Chinese apparel merchants had left its platform in the last quarter due to what he called “coercive” tactics by competing platforms.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.